Book cover

We Live With the Mind of the One Who Rebuilds All Loss

We Live With the Mind of the One Who Rebuilds All Loss declares that Christ in us restores what appears missing and answers visible bodily lack with present creative wholeness. We live from the mind of the Creator, not from evidence of loss. We believe, receive, and speak from union, and we witness restoration where absence once ruled through Christ in us now.

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Chapter 1: We Refuse the Authority of Visible Loss

We refuse the claim that visible loss has authority where Christ dwells. We do not accept that missing parts define reality. We do not agree that absence, damage, or limitation can speak louder than the presence of Christ in us. What appears incomplete to sight is not final in truth. We live from union, not from observation. We do not bow to the report of lack. We stand in the finished work where Christ is present, whole, and active in us now, and we declare that loss has no governing voice where Christ lives.

We confront the lie that the body must remain as it appears. We reject the belief that what is missing cannot return. We refuse every conclusion that calls absence permanent. Christ in us is not limited by what the eye records or what history reports. We do not measure truth by visible condition. We measure truth by indwelling Christ. Where Christ is present, possibility is present. We do not allow the body’s current state to define what Christ is able to manifest through us now.

We expose the false authority of natural conclusions. We do not accept medical finality as the highest word. We do not allow diagnosis to override dominion. We do not treat visible structure as the boundary of what may be restored. Christ in us is the Creator, not a responder to limitation. We do not live as observers of loss. We live as carriers of restoration. We do not adjust our expectation downward. We stand in full expectation that Christ’s wholeness answers every visible lack.

We reject the teaching that loss teaches us to accept less. We do not learn limitation from brokenness. We do not build doctrine around absence. We do not create theology that protects loss from confrontation. Christ in us does not agree with missing parts. Christ in us reveals wholeness. We align with Him. We do not soften our stance to match appearance. We sharpen our confession to match truth. We declare that what is missing is not beyond the reach of Christ who lives in us now.

We affirm that Christ is present and not reduced. Christ in us is not partial, damaged, or lacking. Christ in us is whole, complete, and fully alive. We do not separate His wholeness from our present reality. We do not say He is whole while we remain bound to loss. We declare union. We declare that His wholeness is active in us. We do not divide Christ from manifestation. We agree that what He is, He expresses. We are the place where that expression appears.

We hold fast to the word of truth above visible contradiction. We believe what is written, not what is missing. “For with God nothing shall be impossible” (Luke 1:37, KJV). We do not reduce that statement. We do not reinterpret it to fit loss. We receive it as present truth. We also stand on this: “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8, KJV). We do not accept change in His power or willingness. We anchor our expectation in His unchanging nature.

We declare that loss does not have the final word. We refuse to call permanent what Christ has authority over. We do not wait for permission from appearance. We live from union now. We believe that restoration is not outside us but present within us through Christ. We do not negotiate with absence. We confront it. We do not retreat from visible lack. We answer it with truth. We stand as those in whom Christ lives, and we declare that visible loss yields where He is present.

Chapter 2: We Reject the Teaching That Accepts Missing Parts

We reject every teaching that trains us to accept missing parts as final. We do not receive instruction that lowers expectation below Christ. We do not embrace language that protects loss from confrontation. We do not inherit doctrines that make absence normal where Christ dwells. We refuse reduction. We refuse limitation. We refuse explanations that excuse lack. Christ in us establishes a higher order. We align with His order, not with inherited conclusions. We do not repeat what fear has taught. We speak what Christ reveals now through His indwelling life in us.

We confront the influence of fear that teaches restraint. We do not step back because outcomes seem unlikely. We do not quiet our voice because others accepted less. We do not adopt caution where Christ expresses authority. Fear does not guide us. Christ guides us. We do not protect ourselves from disappointment by lowering expectation. We stand in full confidence of Christ in us. We refuse to rehearse stories of limitation. We establish truth as our foundation and refuse every narrative that keeps loss in place.

We reject tradition that replaces power with explanation. We do not accept interpretations that remove present manifestation. We do not agree with teachings that confine restoration to memory or distance. Christ in us is present, not historical. Christ in us is active, not symbolic. We refuse to honor tradition above truth. We do not allow repeated ideas to override revealed reality. We stand in living doctrine. We do not inherit powerlessness. We walk in present authority because Christ lives in us now without reduction.

We expose the belief that the body cannot change beyond natural process. We do not accept slow permission structures. We do not require visible progression before agreement. Christ in us is not bound to sequence. Christ in us expresses immediately. We do not measure restoration by gradual approval. We receive what Christ is now. We do not build timelines for what Christ already holds. We agree with immediacy. We speak from completion, not from delay. We stand in the present expression of Christ’s wholeness.

We align with the truth that Christ defines expectation. We do not allow culture to set limits. We do not let repeated outcomes define future results. We live from union, not from precedent. Christ in us establishes what is possible. We agree with Him. We do not borrow expectation from what has not yet appeared. We receive expectation from what Christ is now. We stand in full agreement with His nature, and we let that agreement shape our speaking, our asking, and our action.

We stand on the word that confronts reduced expectation. “Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not narrow that statement. We receive it as present truth. We also stand on this: “Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us” (Ephesians 3:20, KJV). We acknowledge that this power works in us now, not outside us or later.

We declare that we do not accept missing parts as normal. We do not protect loss. We confront it with truth. We do not reduce Christ to fit experience. We allow experience to be transformed by Christ. We stand in bold expectation. We reject every voice that teaches acceptance of lack. We receive the fullness of Christ in us. We speak from that fullness. We act from that fullness. We live as those who carry restoration, and we declare that missing parts answer to Christ in us now.

Chapter 3: We Live From the Indwelling Creator Now

We live from the reality that the Creator dwells in us now. We do not approach restoration as outsiders. We do not reach toward power that is distant. Christ in us is the Creator present. We live from union with Him. We do not separate identity from ability. We do not see ourselves as empty vessels waiting for visitation. We are filled with Christ. We are joined to Him. We move from that union. We expect creation to answer because the Creator lives in us now.

We reject the idea that we face bodily loss alone. We do not stand before absence as mere observers. We do not confront damage as powerless. Christ in us is present at every point of lack. We do not approach broken structure as if it has authority. We approach it from union. We do not react to what is missing. We release what is present. Christ in us is not hindered by absence. We agree with His presence and let that agreement govern our expectation and our actions.

We affirm that what is missing to sight is not missing to Christ. We do not define reality by what the body displays. We define reality by who Christ is in us. Christ in us holds the fullness of creation. We do not say that loss limits Him. We do not suggest that absence removes possibility. We remain fixed in truth. We declare that Christ’s wholeness is present in us, and we expect that wholeness to appear where lack once spoke.

We live with the mind of Christ as our operating awareness. We do not think from loss. We do not reason from damage. We do not conclude from absence. We think from Christ. We agree with His completeness. We let His mind shape our words and our actions. We do not speak what we see. We speak what He is. We do not react to the condition. We respond from union. We carry the perspective of the Creator, and we release that perspective into visible reality.

We remain established in union as the source of manifestation. We do not separate what Christ is from what we expect to see. We do not delay agreement. We stand in present alignment. Christ in us expresses through us. We do not hold back expectation. We release it. We do not treat restoration as distant. We treat it as present within us. We move as those who carry the answer, and we expect visible results to follow the truth we hold and speak.

We stand on the word that reveals Christ in us. “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not reduce this truth. We receive it as present reality. We also stand on this: “Abide in me, and I in you” (John 15:4, KJV). We do not treat this as symbolic. We live in this union. We allow this truth to define how we see, how we speak, and how we act in the face of visible lack.

We declare that we live from the indwelling Creator now. We do not wait for Him to arrive. We do not ask Him to become what He already is. We agree with His presence. We release His life. We do not call anything impossible that stands before us. We stand as those who carry Christ, and we declare that what is missing answers to the Creator who lives in us now. We move in that truth, and we expect restoration to appear where loss once ruled.

Chapter 4: We Receive Before the Body Agrees

We receive before the body shows agreement. We do not wait for visible change to confirm truth. We do not delay belief until structure shifts. We believe because Christ is present. We receive because Christ is in us. We do not require evidence to authorize faith. We stand in receiving now. We do not measure reality by appearance. We measure reality by Christ. We accept what He is and what He provides before the body reflects it, and we remain steady in that agreement.

We reject the lie that feeling must confirm reception. We do not wait for sensation. We do not depend on emotion. We do not require internal signals before we agree. Faith receives without permission from the senses. We do not ask the body to validate truth. We let truth transform the body. We remain firm in what we have received. We do not shift with feeling. We stand on Christ. We allow His presence to define our certainty and our confession.

We establish that receiving is present, not progressive. We do not place reception in the future. We do not say we will receive later. We receive now. We believe that we receive now. We do not separate asking from receiving. We align with the instruction of Jesus. We stand in immediate agreement. We do not hold back. We do not hesitate. We receive fully, and we remain fixed in that reception as truth, regardless of what the body currently displays.

We refuse to let the body instruct our faith. We do not allow visible structure to lead belief. We do not follow appearance. We lead with truth. We do not adjust our confession to match what we see. We maintain our confession from what Christ is. We speak from reception. We act from reception. We do not drift into doubt. We remain anchored in what we have received, and we expect the body to align with that truth.

We affirm that faith is not passive. We do not receive and remain silent. We receive and speak. We receive and act. We do not hide our agreement. We express it. We declare what we have received. We command from what we have received. We do not wait for permission to act. We move in alignment with Christ. We let our actions reflect our reception, and we remain consistent in word and deed.

We stand on the instruction of Jesus. “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We receive this as present instruction. We also stand on this: “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We do not require sight. We stand in faith as present evidence. We hold this truth without compromise.

We declare that we receive before the body agrees. We do not delay. We do not hesitate. We believe that we receive now. We speak from that reception. We act from that reception. We stand as those who carry what we have received. We do not surrender to visible contradiction. We remain in truth. We declare that the body aligns with what we have received because Christ in us is present, active, and expressing wholeness now.

Chapter 5: We Speak to the Body From Union Authority

We speak to the body from union authority, not from observation. We do not describe the body; we command it. We do not report loss; we address it. Christ in us is not silent, and we do not remain silent where lack appears. We speak from who He is in us. We do not ask the body what is possible. We declare what is true. We command alignment with Christ’s wholeness. We stand in authority, not as imitators, but as those joined to Him who speaks and it is done.

We lay hands with understanding, not ritual. We do not perform actions hoping for change. We act from union where Christ is present. Our hands are not empty; they carry His life. We do not separate touch from authority. We release what we carry. We do not hesitate before visible damage. We place our hands and we speak. We command restoration. We declare wholeness. We do not retreat into silence. We act as those in whom Christ is active and expressing Himself now.

We speak directly to bone, tissue, nerve, and structure. We do not generalize. We address what stands before us. We command bones to align, nerves to respond, tissue to be restored, and structure to be made whole. We do not accept fragmentation. We speak unity and completion. Christ in us does not avoid detail. We release His authority into every part. We do not leave any area untouched. We declare full restoration, not partial improvement, and we stand firm in that command.

We reject passive language. We do not say what might happen. We declare what is established in Christ. We do not speak uncertainty. We speak with clarity. We do not suggest outcomes. We command alignment. Christ in us does not negotiate with lack. We do not negotiate. We speak with authority. We do not apologize for boldness. We act in truth. We do not soften our words to match doubt. We sharpen our words to match Christ’s finished work in us.

We bless the body with the life of Christ. We do not curse what we seek to restore. We do not speak against it. We speak life into it. We release the blessing of wholeness. We declare that the body responds to Christ. We do not treat it as resistant. We treat it as subject to Him. We align our words with His nature. We speak peace, order, and function. We expect response because Christ in us is present and active in every word we release.

We stand on the word that affirms our authority in Christ. “In my name shall they lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:17–18, KJV). We do not reduce this. We receive it as instruction. We also stand on this: “If ye shall ask any thing in my name, I will do it” (John 14:14, KJV). We speak in His name, not as repetition, but as union. We release His authority through our words and actions now.

We declare that we speak to the body from union authority. We do not step back. We step forward. We do not wait for change. We release command. We do not observe loss. We confront it. We speak to every part, and we declare restoration. We stand as those in whom Christ lives, and we command the body to align with His wholeness now. We move in boldness, and we expect the body to answer the voice of Christ in us.

Chapter 6: We Witness Restoration Where Loss Once Ruled

We witness restoration where loss once ruled because Christ in us expresses wholeness. We do not treat restoration as rare. We expect it as the natural expression of Christ. Where parts were missing, we see supply. Where function was absent, we see response. We do not marvel as if this is foreign. We recognize Christ. We acknowledge His life appearing. We do not elevate the miracle above Him. We honor Him as the source, and we expect His expression to be seen.

We see limbs restored and function returning because Christ in us is not limited by absence. We do not call missing parts permanent. We see structure supplied and movement restored. We witness coordination where there was none. We do not explain this away. We agree with it. We do not shrink back from testimony. We speak it clearly. We declare that Christ in us answers loss with visible wholeness, and we remain established in that expectation.

We see senses restored where they were absent or damaged. We witness eyes responding, ears opening, and perception returning. We do not treat this as exceptional. We treat it as Christ expressing Himself. We do not detach Him from what we see. We recognize His presence. We remain anchored in truth. We do not let familiarity reduce expectation. We continue to stand in bold agreement that what is missing answers to Christ in us.

We see internal restoration where organs respond and function returns. We witness systems aligning and life flowing where there was disruption. We do not limit restoration to what is visible externally. We declare full wholeness. We speak to every hidden part, and we expect response. Christ in us does not distinguish between visible and unseen. We release His authority into all areas, and we witness restoration appearing where loss once ruled.

We see material conditions yield where foreign objects once dominated. We witness alignment where structure was altered. We do not accept substitution as final. We declare transformation. Christ in us is not constrained by what has been inserted or removed. We speak to every condition, and we expect change. We do not accept permanence of alteration. We declare restoration of design, and we stand firm as that restoration appears.

We stand on the word that affirms visible works through Christ. “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We receive this as present truth. We also stand on this: “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not narrow this. We hold it fully. We remain established in believing, and we witness what Christ expresses through us now.

We declare that we witness restoration where loss once ruled. We do not question it. We agree with it. We do not reduce it. We testify of it. We stand as those who carry Christ, and we expect His wholeness to appear. We do not step back into limitation. We move forward in truth. We declare that what was missing is restored, and we remain fixed in the reality that Christ in us expresses creative miracles now.

Chapter 7: We Go Forth Commanding Wholeness Without Delay

We go forth in full authority as those in whom Christ lives. We do not wait for readiness. We stand ready in Him. We do not delay action. We move now. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk as Christ. We carry His life into every situation. We do not retreat before loss. We confront it. We move with clarity, boldness, and certainty, knowing that Christ in us is present and active now.

We speak to the body wherever we encounter lack. We do not remain silent. We command wholeness. We declare restoration. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We refuse visible finality. We do not accept what appears fixed. We speak to bone, tissue, nerve, blood, teeth, organs, and structure. We declare alignment with Christ. We do not hesitate. We move in authority, and we expect response because Christ in us speaks through us.

We lay hands with intention and authority. We do not perform empty actions. We release Christ. We do not ask whether it will work. We act because He is present. We command restoration. We declare wholeness. We speak life into every part. We do not withdraw when appearance resists. We remain firm. We continue to speak. We continue to act. We do not surrender ground. We stand as those who carry Christ and release His life without interruption.

We remain fixed in believing reception as we act. We do not separate receiving from doing. We ask, we receive, we speak, and we act. We do not break agreement. We do not shift into doubt. We remain steady. We do not allow visible contradiction to silence us. We continue in truth. We stand in union, and we release that union into action. We move as those who know Christ in us is the answer to every visible lack.

We refuse every thought that suggests delay. We do not postpone manifestation. We do not create distance. We live in present expression. Christ in us is not waiting. We are not waiting. We move now. We speak now. We act now. We do not call for future permission. We stand in present authority. We release that authority into every situation, and we expect immediate alignment with Christ’s wholeness.

We stand on the word as we go. “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15, KJV). We receive this as command. We also stand on this: “Freely ye have received, freely give” (Matthew 10:8, KJV). We do not withhold what we carry. We release it. We do not limit where we go. We move with Christ’s authority, and we express His life wherever we stand.

We declare that we go forth commanding wholeness without delay. We do not hesitate. We do not retreat. We do not reduce expectation. We walk as those in whom Christ lives. We speak to every form of loss, and we declare restoration. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We release His life through our words and actions, and we expect visible manifestation now as we move in union with Him.